death penalty news

December 14, 2004


AFRICA:

Senegal Abolishes the Death Penalty, Who's Next, Perhaps Ghana?

Amnesty International has praised the adoption by the Senegalese Parliament 
of the bill abolishing the death penalty.

Senegal becomes the fourth member state of the Economic Community of West 
African States (ECOWAS) to outlaw recourse to capital punishment (after 
Cape Verde, Guinea Bissau and Ivory Coast).

Under the leadership of President Wade, the bill had been adopted 
unanimously by the Senegalese parliament last Friday with an overwhelming 
majority. Senegale has not carried out executions since 1967 but had 
continued to hand down death sentences, most recently in July 2004.

"Senegal should be a source of inspiration for all ECOWAS and other African 
countries, which have not yet abolished the death penalty. Other African 
states should now follow the example of Senegal and respect the fundamental 
right to life," the organization said. Ghana still has death sentence on 
its books and there is reported to be scores of people on death sentence in 
Ghanaian jails waiting to be killed. Some of them have been waiting for 
more than five years.

Amnesty International also welcomes the important steps taken by Sierra 
Leone and Nigeria towards the abolition in the past months.

In October 2004, the Sierra Leone Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) 
finally published its report. Among its key recommendations, the TRC asked 
the government: "to abolish the death penalty by repealing immediately all 
laws authorising the use of capital punishment". This recommendation is 
categorized as "imperative", that is, the government ought to implement it 
"without delay". The TRC further recommended the introduction of a 
moratorium on all executions pending a vote on abolition of the death 
penalty by Parliament. It also urged that any pending death sentences 
should be immediately commuted by the President.

And in October 2004, the National Study Group on the Death Penalty - in 
charge of conducting a national debate in Nigeria - presented its report to 
the Federal Government of Nigeria. It called on the Federal Government to 
impose a moratorium on executions and commute to life imprisonment the 
sentences of all death row prisoners whose appeals have been concluded.

President Olusegun Obasanjo, who is personally opposed to the death 
penalty, had launched a national debate on the issue in November 2003.

Amnesty International has been actively campaigning for the abolition of 
the death penalty in West Africa since October 2003. The death penalty is 
the ultimate cruel, inhuman and degrading punishment. It violates the right 
to life. It is irrevocable and can be inflicted on the innocent. It has 
never been shown to deter crime more effectively than other punishments.

(source: AllAfrica.com)

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